The integration of natural science and spirituality is accomplished by putting consciousness into the equations of the quantized relativistic model of reality. This approach, with a quantum calculus based on the precise empirical data provided by the Large Hadron Collider, leads to the discovery of gimmel, the non-physical third form that must exist in addition to mass and energy, in order for there to be a stable universe.

Saturday, November 25, 2017

SCIENCE IS TAKING A QUANTUM LEAP

I have just finished writing a description of the development
of the science of the future. It is to be included as a chapter in the first
volume of the Academy for the Advancement of Post-Materialist Science, to be
published soon; - I’m hoping within the next year. My chapter is currently being reviewed by the founders of the Academy and by Dr. Vernon Neppe, my research partner. In the meantime, here is a
brief summary of the chapter. It contains an explanation of why current
mainstream science cannot answer many of the most important questions we have about
the reality we experience, what the mainstream paradigm is missing, and how the
science of the future is expanded to be much more comprehensive and capable of addressing
all of reality. The chapter asks and answers a series of questions:

1,
WHAT WAS MISSING BEFORE EINSTEIN AND PLANCK?

Before
Planck, mainstream science had no idea that reality is
quantized, i.e., that reality only occurs in multiples of very small amounts of
mass and energy called quanta.

Before
Einstein, mainstream science had no idea that matter and energy
are two forms of the same thing, their equivalence defined mathematically by E
= mc2.

2.
WHAT IS STILL MISSING AFTER PLANCK AND EINSTEIN?

A mathematical
expression of consciousness is conspicuously absent from the
equations of mainstream science, despite the fact, that our only direct knowledge
of reality is through the experience of consciousness. It should be clear that consciousness must be included in any truly scientific
analysis of reality.

More than 85 years ago, Max Planck said: “I regard consciousness as fundamental. I regard matter as a derivative
of consciousness.”

Planck’s discovery that energy is meted out by nature
in multiples of a basic unit revolutionized our understanding of the nature of
reality, but the implications of this discovery have not yet been fully
realized by mainstream science. Something is still missing.

3.
WHY IS MAINSTREAM SCIENCE IGNORING CONSCIOUSNESS?

Science has been very successful investigating and
exploiting the physical aspects of reality. But we are at the point where
knowledge is rapidly out-striping understanding and wisdom. As a result, civilization
is in danger of self-destruction. The short-sighted egocentric science of
specialization and institutional departmentalization has made it almost
impossible for scientists, engineers and technicians to see the big picture. Because
of this, the danger of blundering into situations detrimental to the survival
of the human species is rapidly increasing.

The Standard Model of particle physics has been constructed
from terabytes of data obtained from destructive testing in particle colliders,
and particle physicists have borrowed tools from the body of mathematical logic
as needed to solve problems without regard for the axiomatic assumptions underlying
them. As a result, some applications, while yielding useful results, produce a misleading
picture of the nature of reality.

4.
WHY IS NEW MATHEMATICS NEEDED?

The most important example of how ignoring the larger
picture leads to misunderstanding, is the application of the differential and
integral calculus to quantum phenomena. The calculus of Leibniz and Newton,
developed over 300 years ago, depends on the assumption that equations describing
physical processes are continuous functions with variables that can approach
zero infinitely closely. But quantum reality is not continuous, and the
variables describing it are not infinitely divisible.

Put
as simply as possible: The structures of physical reality cannot be divided indefinitely.
This means that the calculus being used by mainstream physicists, while very
useful at the mid-scale of reality, is inappropriate for application at the
quantum level.

To avoid the confusion resulting from the application
of inappropriate mathematical tools, and deepen our understanding quantum
phenomena, the science of the future replaces the calculus of Newton and
Leibniz with the calculus of dimensional distinctions (CoDD), developed by this
author over a period of several years. A major part of the chapter for the AAPS book is
a presentation of the derivation of the basic unit of measurement of the CoDD,
the quantum equivalence unit, and its application to the description of quantum reality.

The science of the future must incorporate knowledge
gained from the last two major scientific paradigms shifts, and move on to
expand the scientific investigation of reality beyond the simplistic materialistic
model to which mainstream science currently limits itself. It has done this by deriving
the universal quantum equivalence unit as the basis of the appropriate quantum
calculus, and combining the principles of relativity and quantum physics. This enables us to put consciousness into the
equations and re-unite science with its true metaphysical basis.

In the process of deriving the true quantum
equivalence unit for the calculus of distinctions, we discovered a third
quantifiable form of reality that exists in addition to matter and energy. We
chose the third letter of the Hebrew alphabet, gimmel, to represent that third
form of reality. Gimmel is not measurable as matter or energy, and is,
therefore, non-physical. When the natural elements of the Periodic Table are
analyzed using true quantum units, we see that physical reality is specifically
designed to support life. Gimmel is nothing other than the mathematical logic
of consciousness guiding the development of organic life as the vehicle of
individualized consciousness.

For the first time in modern history, we have taken
the measure of consciousness and put
it directly into the equations of science. But much more needs to be done. A more
detailed development and application of this approach to every aspect of reality
awaits the fresh young minds of the scientists of the future. The answers
provided in this chapter afford only a glimpse of the broad landscape of where
the science of the future will go. It will be a science that, in addition to providing
unambiguous answers to questions about the physical universe, will also be able
to investigate the greater domain of non-physical reality and explore the
infinite possibilities of the human mind and spirit.

“The day science begins to study
non-physical phenomena, it will make more progress in one decade than in all
the previous centuries of its existence”. - Nikola Tesla, 1856

I will try to keep up with the progress of the Academy for the Advancement of Post-materialist Science and post updates on this blog as often as I can.

4 comments:

Nothing further the add, Ed, other than what has been meaningfully discussed by us in the past; except to ask whether the 'Academy for the Advancement of Post-materialist Science' will eventually have a contactable and online website of its own, or will all its future dealings continue to be dealt with solely by yourself?